Cs 1.6 Open Console

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Brian

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Aug 5, 2024, 8:12:06 AM8/5/24
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GitHubchrisgrieser/obsidian-theme-design-utilities: Some Utilities and Quality-of-Life Features for Designers of Obsidian Themes has a command, Toggle Devtools, that you can set a hotkey to or run from the command palette to open / close the dev tools.

I found a fix for the output console not displaying.

Close all ignition running designers.

Delete your .ignition folder within c:/Users//.ignition.

Relaunch the designer and it will rebuild your cache.

I opened my designer, it has the default view, I selected output console and it showed up as pop-up.

Back in business.


Is there any possibilities to open gui tk application? My gui opens and immediately closes. I start tcl console with -cli and --script options. When I open my script from gui system-console it works fine


Intel does not verify all solutions, including but not limited to any file transfers that may appear in this community. Accordingly, Intel disclaims all express and implied warranties, including without limitation, the implied warranties of merchantability, fitness for a particular purpose, and non-infringement, as well as any warranty arising from course of performance, course of dealing, or usage in trade.


The "trim stack" is a vertical icon bar that should appear, if it isn't there already, on one side of the main window. Back when this answer was originally written, it was down the left hand side (of which I had a screen shot that unfortunately was uploaded to some image paste bin place and not Stack Overflow, then linked, and has since been lost). Not being much of an eclipse user currently I don't know if this is still the case.


It contains icons for each sub-window that is minimized, so if none of them are minimized, there is no trim stack. Try minimizing the Package Explorer/Navigator window and you should see it appear. You can then click the "Restore" icon (the overlapping squares at the top) in the trim stack to get the window back.


BUT -- and it's not consistent -- sometimes with Eclipse Juno when the window with the Console, etc, is minimized and there is no trim stack, the trim stack doesn't appear and using "Show View" does nothing. The way around that I've found is to minimize some other window, then the trim stack appears and the Console icon (blue & white monitor square) appears. Click that and the Console, etc. appears in a pop-up. Click the Restore icon in that pop-up and it will become part of the main window again.


I also deleted my eclipse console by mistake, however what worked best for me was to type "console" in the "Quick Access" box to the right of the menu and that brought it right back! I'm running version 4.2.1, not sure if this Quick Accessbox is available in other versions.


Better to save the code first, windows -> Perspective -> close all Perspective.Then from windows -> Perspective -> open your desired perspective. Now you can all the tab which required for the perspective


The only reliable way to open it is Window -> Show View -> Other -> Search "console".There was a handful suggestions in this post and none of them works! Apparently Eclipse likes to change their logic every other second.


Hey Thanks, doxtu, I like it better when it is not opening in another window (like in FF with ctrl-shift-k in Windows) but yes this is what I was looking for since I am a game programmer and wanted to test in this browser. Each browser has a different way to activate the dev tools and I could not find what they were in Brave.

Thanks for the input!


SAS Management Console is a Java-based application. A possible explanation of this behaviour is use of an incompatible version of Java. Have you updated Java recently? Are you opening SAS MC on the server itself or from a PC connecting to your SAS server?


I have resolved my own issue with SAS Management Console 9.5 M5 not starting. It appears that the VJR cache did not get updated. After deleting/renaming the file C:\Program Files\SASHome2\SASVersionedJarRepository\eclipse\com.sas.app.launcher.cacheFile (as mentioned in for Foundation SAS) I was able to start SAS Management Console successfully. I took a little longer the first time whilst it rebuilt that cache file.


I need help to understand how console with multiple files open?

Console is just showing the program I have made in file one but not the one in file 2. How can I fix it?

Replit Profile: @munazzahatiq92


I use this console app (Far manager since early Windows versions - it is best commander ever, the linux Midnight Commander is a pale rip off compared, it grew from Norton Commander and became 100x more powerful with time).


It is now opens not as console app but as a tab in Terminal, after some changes in Terminal settings its windows has no header, I cant see the bottom edge to move it or resize, the font is broken (there are vertical spaces in graphic characters), the setting cannot be opened because it has no header so I cant fix what I've done.


But at any rate - I want same control for this specific console app (and for my Visual Studio console apps) as it was before. I dont want to have a container with muddled and vague control. It gives me zero advantages and huge headache.


If you close all command prompt windows and want to open a new Command Prompt window, press CTRL+ALT+DELETE, click Start Task Manager, click More Details, click File, click Run, and then type cmd.exe. Alternatively, you can log off and log back on.


I am wondering what makes an Action have the status of OPEN, after it has completed successfully on all targeted endpoints. If it was a Policy, that would keep it open, but I have some Actions that are not Policies, have completed on all targeted computers and still have a status of OPEN? Why is that? Thanks in advance.


I want to install a file and the instructions say "Open a console/terminal", then "and cd to the location where the installer was downloaded". What does this mean in plain English? It seems one has to be a computer geek to do the simplest thing in Linux!


"Under Linux there are GUIs (graphical user interfaces), where you can point and click and drag, and hopefully get work done without first reading lots of documentation. The traditional Unix environment is a CLI (command line interface), where you type commands to tell the computer what to do. That is faster and more powerful, but requires finding out what the commands are."-- from man intro(1)


In the terminal use the command cd to change the present working directory to a new directory (directory is used as a synonym for folder). For example, to change directory to your Desktop type the command:


You can also type cd in the terminal followed by a space character and drag the folder icon of the directory that you want to change to from the file manager into the terminal, and then the full path to that directory will be automatically entered into the terminal for you.


In Linux you can do basically everything with the terminal, and personally I suggest you to get used to it and not to be scared of it. It is SUPER useful, especially when your desktop environment dies and there is no way to restart it again graphically.


This terminal which is opened in Ubuntu by pressing CTRL+ALT+T is the opposite of a GUI Which is a Graphical User Interfaceand it normally does not use a pointing devices like a mouse. It is commonly used with only the keyboard or a keyboard like interface. You type in the terminal what is called a command to tell the terminal to do something and it replies with an output depending on what you told the terminal. In the image above I used the command ls to tell the terminal to "List" all the files in my current directory.


If I used the cd which is short for "Change Directory" I would change my current directory to another directory that I had added after the cd command. For example cd Downloads would take me to the Downloads directory.


Something new: For some reason, in the last few weeks Console has been opening itself and leaving a long list of messages under "All Messages." It doesn't seem to be asking me to do anything, but I don't understand why it is opening up by itself. Does it want me to do something? Am I experiencing some sort of problem that I should address? Wouldn't Console alert me that it's a problem? But if not, why has it started opening only now?


I have a meta-question for my own curiousity. How come your console display sampling above looks like that? Frankly it's harder to read as a line separated highly spaced table since I find it easier to read as it has been presented in console displays for years. It would be more readable if you just cut/pasted the text lines into posts in the future (and perhaps use a monospaced font).


Sure, but you don't have to remove it for ever. Remove it and test it. Then you'll know if the behaviour is caused by ClamXav or not. If it's not, and/or when you've fixed the problem, you can re-install it.


Finding out why a page is slow, when an addon is throwing errors, what's being requested or sent out - all possible in the dev console. I had to use them just the other day to figure out why a single post on this blog wasn't displaying the summary on the main page - an unexpected character was messing up some custom JavaScript code.


If you're not using Brave yet, do. This is my preferred browser now that they have all of the annoying kinks worked out... it's more secure by default and they have this novel idea for rewarding good content.


That link is a pretty basic (nearly useless) overview - there's more detail in the Safari Developer Help docs. I don't have a Mac or Safari, so the best I could do to test this was download Safari 5 for Windows from 2012.

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